Most investing advice tells you what to buy. Almost none of it tells you what you're quietly paying — and over 25 years, a 1% fee can matter more than which fund you picked.
₹10,000/month from age 25 grows to more than double what ₹20,000/month from age 40 does by 60, at the same return. Time is the one input you can never buy back.
Missing just the 10 best days in a decade can cut equity returns roughly in half — and the best days tend to arrive right after the worst ones, exactly when nervous investors have sold.
At ~6% inflation, money loses half its purchasing power in about 12 years. An FD earning 6.5% taxed at slab rate can actually lose real value. "Safe" and "growing" are not the same thing.
Emergency fund (6–12 months of expenses), term insurance, and health insurance come before picking funds. One hospital bill without cover can undo five years of SIPs.
Spread across equity, debt, and geographies. Diversification is the only free lunch in investing — it lowers risk without necessarily lowering returns. Concentration builds wealth for insiders; it destroys it for everyone else.
Over 10+ years, the majority of actively managed funds underperform their own benchmark after fees. A low-cost Nifty 50 index fund is a legitimate core holding, not a compromise.
| Particulars | Typical cost |
|---|---|
| Regular plan commission (trail) Banks and distributors earn a commission every year you stay invested — deducted invisibly from the fund's NAV. This is why your "relationship manager" recommends funds. Direct plans of the same fund skip it entirely. | 0.5–1.5% / yr |
| Expense ratio The fund's own running cost, also deducted from NAV daily. Active funds charge 1.5–2.25%; index funds charge as little as 0.1–0.3%. You never see the debit — you only see slightly lower returns. | 0.1–2.25% / yr |
| Exit load A penalty (commonly 1%) for redeeming equity funds within 12 months. Fine if you know; expensive if you don't. | ~1% one-time |
| Brokerage, demat & hidden trading charges "Zero brokerage" platforms still charge STT, exchange fees, GST, stamp duty, and annual demat maintenance. Frequent trading multiplies all of them. | varies |
| Insurance sold as investment (ULIPs, endowment plans) Premium allocation, mortality, and admin charges can eat 20–60% of early premiums. Returns often land at 4–5% — worse than an FD, with worse liquidity. Buy pure term insurance and invest the difference separately. | worst offender |
| Churning When an advisor keeps switching you between funds or policies, each switch earns them a fresh commission — and costs you exit loads and taxes. Activity is not the same as advice. | compounds |
| Taxes on gains Equity: gains above ₹1.25 lakh/yr taxed at 12.5% (long-term), 20% if sold within a year. Debt funds: taxed at your slab rate. Every unnecessary sale is a tax event. | 12.5–30%+ |
| The pattern Every charge is a percentage of your money, taken whether or not the product performs. | yours, gone |
Bank staff have sales targets. Products pushed hardest (ULIPs, NFOs, regular plans) usually pay them the most, not you. A fee-only advisor (SEBI Registered Investment Adviser) is paid by you alone, so their incentive points the same way yours does.
Commission-based distributors are not legally required to put your interest first. Always ask one question: "How exactly do you get paid on this product?" A hesitant answer is your answer.
Funds are advertised right after their best runs. Chasing 5-star ratings and recent returns is statistically one of the most reliable ways to underperform.
Insurance and investment fused into one expensive product. Premium allocation, mortality, policy admin, and fund management charges stack up, and 5-year lock-ins trap you. Typical real returns: 4–6%. Buy pure term insurance + invest separately in mutual funds instead — the split does both jobs better.
Marketed as safe and disciplined, they usually return 4–5% over 20+ years — below inflation — while paying the agent one of the highest commissions in finance (up to 25–35% of your first-year premium). Surrendering early loses most of what you paid.
The ₹10 NAV means nothing — it's a unit price, not a discount. NFOs have no track record and are launched when a theme is hot and easy to sell. An existing fund with a 10-year history is almost always the better choice.
Any scheme promising fixed high returns (15%+ "guaranteed") is paying old investors with new investors' money until it collapses. Unregistered chit funds, emu farms, teak plantations, crypto "staking pools" — the costume changes, the script doesn't.
SEBI's own study found ~9 out of 10 individual F&O traders lose money, with average losses over ₹1 lakh a year. Options are a professional's risk-transfer tool, not a wealth-building one.
Pump-and-dump groups buy cheap illiquid stocks first, then "recommend" them to thousands of members and sell into the spike. If you got the tip, you're the exit, not the insider.
These are unregulated deposits with a jeweller, redeemable only as making-charge-loaded ornaments at their prices. For gold exposure, Gold ETFs or mutual funds are cheaper, purer, and actually yours.
Loan interest is guaranteed at 11–40%; market returns are not guaranteed at all. Leverage turns a normal correction into a personal crisis. Invest only money you won't need for 5+ years.
Equity markets fall 30–50% roughly once a decade and recover every time so far. The plan you make in calm weather — keep SIPs running, don't check daily — is the plan that saves you in the storm.
Hot stock tips, "guaranteed" returns, crypto doubling schemes — anyone with a genuine sure thing doesn't need your money. Guaranteed + high return = fraud, every time.
Studies of brokerage accounts consistently show the most active traders earn the lowest returns. Automate a SIP, review once or twice a year, and let boredom compound.
A one-page list of accounts, nominees on every holding, and a will. Unclaimed deposits in India run into tens of thousands of crores — mostly money families simply couldn't locate.
72 ÷ annual return = years to double. At 12%, money doubles every ~6 years; at 6% (an FD), every ~12.
A rough starting point for your equity %. A 33-year-old might hold ~65–70% equity, the rest in debt.
Needs / wants / savings as a share of income. Serious wealth-builders push the last number to 30–40%.
The classic financial-independence target: a corpus of ~25× annual spending can sustain a ~4% withdrawal.
Same fund, same manager, same portfolio — the Direct plan just skips the middleman's commission.
Emergency fund size, kept in a liquid fund or sweep FD — not in equity, not in a current account earning 0%.